So I just rewatched Fahrenheit 9/11......

Got bored this morning and didn't have anything new from Netflix so I decided to rewatch Fahrenheit 9/11 because I've been interested in seeing it lately.
After four years and upon further examination, I feel like this was a very well made documentary. I remember thinking it was a propaganda film the first time I watched it and that it wasn't an unbiased view of the events surrounding 9/11, that it was more of Michael Moore's agenda than anything else.

On a second viewing, though, things were really starting to stick out to me more. For one, while I just brushed aside all the connections between the Bush family and Saudi Arabia the first time I viewed it, this time around--given the high gas prices our country faces and the fact that we're still in Iraq--I couldn't help but be pulled in.

As for the way it portrayed soldiers in Iraq, the first time I viewed it (back in 2004), i thought that Moore must have gone out of his way to find the few unhappy ones there and that he didn't try to balance it with people who were actually happy to be serving this country. This time around, though, it struck me that that's not really what this film is suppose to be about. This film is telling the story of soldiers who are still proud to be there but who are ALSO unhappy.

I guess the greatest thing I can say about this movie is that, given the current state of the world, Fahrenheit 9/11 may have been ahead of its time.